With a nod to full disclosure, adding an oxygenate isn't the only
technical reason for using alcohol. As mentioned earlier, it also
has a much higher octane rating than gasoline. Think Indy cars with
14-1 compression (might be even higher by now). That is why, as
mentioned earlier, leeching the alcohol out will leave a gas with a
much lower octane rating; the alcohol replaces some of the octane
enhancers that were previously added to the fuel.
Actually, I think that alcohol is a pretty good fuel for piston
engines, & it will work fine for rotaries, even though they
don't need the extra octane (just kinda tough on the fiberglass fuel
tank guys, both a/c & boats). But I also think that we have a
hard time separating technical issues from political issues. That's
why I made the comment that alcohol wouldn't be in gas without the
corn lobby. If it had been put there for technical reasons, we'd be
using sugar cane like Brazil, or sugar beets, or switch grass, or
even kudzu, but not corn, because while corn does have a slightly
positive net energy yield, it's far and away the worst of all the
available sources. It's use in gas is driving food costs through the
roof for us and the rest of the world, too. I read recently that
around 30% of our corn production now goes into fuel instead of
food, and corn is in *every* food product that's bought in a
package.
The 'corn lobby' is obviously the euphemism for giant farm
production conglomerates.
Now, isn't everyone happy that the 'conservative' Supreme Court has
now ruled that corporations can contribute unlimited, undocumented
money to political campaigns?
Charlie
On 5/14/2011 1:08 PM,
wrjjrs@aol.com wrote:
Mike,
The real problem is that using ethanol to begin with is junk
science. All a oxygenate in your fuel does is make you get
poorer mileage. All modern fi cars richen the mixture
automatically until the O2 sensor says nada. If can cost a full
1-2 mpg.
Bill Jepson